Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Distressed Homeowners: Fannie Mae is Offering Help!

Fannie Mae is beginning to implement some changes to its policies regarding distressed homeowners. The institution is now moving towards helping currently distressed homeowners maintain their ability to own a home, by giving them second chances. Intended to support the housing market and incentivize homeowner cooperation with lenders, Fannie Mae will now offer homeowners who grant a "deed-in-lieu of foreclosure" a shorter waiting period before they will be able to qualify for a new Fannie Mae mortgage.

Historically, this waiting period has been at least four years, which is to say that if you, as a Fannie Mae borrower lost your home to foreclosure, you would not be eligibly for another Fannie Mae mortgage for at least four years from the date of foreclosure. Now, however, this waiting period is being reduced by half.

With the new two-year waiting period, homeowners will be required to put at least twenty percent of the purchase price as a down payment, however. This new policy will begin to take effect on July 1 of this year. Fannie Mae is hoping that offering such incentives to these homeowners will be helpful to the country's recovery as well as setting forth a policy that homeowners who work with lenders are less risky to deal with and better than homeowners who simply abandon their mortgage obligations or fight the lenders for short sales.

Fannie Mae's policy may be, in part, a reaction to Obama's HAFA program which is aimed at homeowners who do not qualify for modifications and other foreclosure alternatives. Industry expert are predicting a dramatic increase in "pre-foreclosure" activities this year and next year, which Fannie Mae is hoping to alleviate through its new policy.
 
 
Mitra Karimi
Crestico, Inc.